Saskatchewan

Vote Compass: Men generally OK with strippers in bars, women opposed

Most Saskatchewan men believe strippers in bars should be legal, while most women think it's a bad idea, a Vote Compass report says.

Many people in Sask. support legalizing strip clubs

Stripping where alcohol is served was made legal in 2014, then banned again in 2015. (Ryan Pilon/CBC)

Most Saskatchewan men believe strippers in bars should be legal, while most women think it's a bad idea, a Vote Compass report says.

A dramatic divide along gender lines on the stripping-and-alcohol question was one of the findings of the most recent report from Vote Compass, which is CBC's citizen engagement application.

The report says that 40 per cent of Saskatchewan people agree with the following statement: "Strip clubs should be legal in Saskatchewan."

On the other hand, 34 per cent disagreed with legalizing strip clubs.

Saskatchewan legalized stripping where alcohol is served in 2014 following a decades-long ban, but Premier Brad Wall changed his mind in 2015 and the prohibition came back.

"Rarely do we see an issue like this on which all the parties are aligned, despite there being a clear split in public opinion," said Gregory Kerr, research manager for Vox Pop Labs, which created Vote Compass for CBC. 

"In this case, all parties oppose legalizing strip clubs, despite the fact that 40 per cent of the population says strip clubs should be legal."

Saskatchewan men are twice as likely as women to support legal stripping in bars, a Vote Compass report says. (Darcy Hunter/CBC)

The male-female split is a key factor in how the votes were distributed.

While 45 per cent of women said they disagreed with the idea of legal strip clubs, 55 per cent of men said they agreed.

The findings are based on 11,425 respondents who participated in Vote Compass from March 7 to March 28.

The online tool lets people find out where they fit in on the political landscape in relation to the Saskatchewan Party, the New Democrats, the Liberal Party and the Greens.

It also lets the public weigh in on issues that could come up during the campaign. The economy and health care have proven to be the two issues the public cares about the most.

The latest report from Vox Pop Labs asked the public about stripping in bars, but also about school prayer and gay-straight alliances. 

When people were asked if public schools should start the day with a Christian prayer, the results spanned the spectrum.

Some 40 per cent said they disagreed, 35 per cent were in favour and 25 per cent were neutral. The remaining one per cent said they didn't know.

Saskatchewan Party supporters tended to be more friendly to the idea of school prayer than people leaning to the other parties.

"While a majority of Green, Liberal and NDP supporters oppose starting the day in public schools with Christian prayer, only 28 per cent of Saskatchewan Party voters share the same opinion," Kerr said. "Youth are more likely to oppose this practice, as are those who do not have any religious affiliation. "  

Rarely do we see an issue like this [strip clubs] on which all the parties are aligned, despite there being a clear split in public opinion.Greg Kerr,. Vox Pop Labs

A third question asked Saskatchewan residents whether all schools in the province should be legally required to permit gay-straight alliance groups.

More people said they supported this measure than opposed: 46 per cent versus 28 per cent.

Some 27 per cent of people in Saskatchewan strongly disagree with the idea of starting the public school day with a Christian prayer. (Darcy Hunter/CBC)

Once again, Sask. Party supporters tended to be cooler to the proposal compared to everyone else and 24 per cent of them said they strongly disagreed. 

"Unlike the issue of strip clubs, that of gay-straight alliances illustrates a clear ideological divide, though opinion seems to crystallize somewhat more uniformly among left-leaning voters than among those who identify as belonging to the right," Kerr said.

Saskatchewan voters go to the polls on April 4.

On the question of whether all schools should be legally required to permit gay-straight alliance groups, 16 per cent said they strongly disagreed, while 27 per cent said they strongly agreed. (Darcy Hunter/CBC)

About Vote Compass

Developed by a team of social and statistical scientists from Vox Pop Labs, Vote Compass is a civic engagement application offered in Canada exclusively by CBC News. The findings are based on 11,425 respondents who participated in Vote Compass from March 9 to March 28, 2016. Unlike online opinion polls, respondents to Vote Compass are not pre-selected.

Similar to opinion polls, however, the data are a non-random sample from the population and have been weighted in order to approximate a representative sample. Vote Compass data have been weighted by geography, gender, age, educational attainment, occupation, and religion to ensure the sample's composition reflects that of the actual population of Saskatchewan according to census data and other population estimates.